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Athens Institute for Education and Research
ATINER
ATINER's Conference Paper Series
ART2013-0777
Frances Van Keuren
Professor Emerita of Ancient Art History
University of Georgia
USA
Kristen Miller Zohn
Director of Collections and Exhibitions
The Columbus Museum
USA
A Double-Sided Drawing by Thomas
Eakins of an Antique Cast and a Male
Model
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Athens Institute for Education and Research
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ISSN 2241-2891
19/12/2013
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An Introduction to
ATINER's Conference Paper Series
ATINER started to publish this conference papers series in 2012. It includes only the
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organized by our Institute every year. The papers published in the series have not been
refereed and are published as they were submitted by the author. The series serves two
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Dr. Gregory T. Papanikos
President
Athens Institute for Education and Research
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This paper should be cited as follows:
Van Keuren, F. and Miller Zohn, K. (2013) "A Double-Sided Drawing by
Thomas Eakins of an Antique Cast and a Male Model" Athens: ATINER'S
Conference Paper Series, No: ART2013-0777.
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A Double-Sided Drawing by Thomas Eakins of
an Antique Cast and a Male Model
Frances Van Keuren
Professor Emerita of Ancient Art History
University of Georgia
USA
Kristen Miller Zohn
Director of Collections and Exhibitions
The Columbus Museum
USA
Abstract
The Columbus Museum in Georgia owns a large, double-sided charcoal drawing
by American painter Thomas Eakins, which shows a plaster cast of a helmeted
warrior on one side and a nude male model on the other. While it is clearly a
student drawing, it has been assigned to either Eakins’ years as a student at the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia (1862-66) or his years of
study in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts (1866-69). The demonstrated skill of
execution of the drawing, particularly of the side with the cast drawing of the bust
of Menelaus in the Vatican, is far superior to the undeveloped execution of three
cast drawings that must belong to Eakins’ early student days in Philadelphia. It is
instead comparable to a bust drawing of a man in a turban that is generally
believed to belong early in Eakins’ Paris days. While Eakins seems to have
studied without regular instruction at the Pennsylvania Academy, he received
rigorous training in cast and figure drawing at the École des Beaux-Arts under
Jean-Léon Gérôme between 1866 and 1867. Thereafter, he began his study of
painting, and expressed a vehement aversion to cast drawing. Thus, the Columbus
Museum drawing can best be assigned to Eakins’ early years in Paris, between
1866 and 1867.
Keywords:
Corresponding Author:
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In an 1879 interview with art critic William C. Brownell, American painter
Thomas Eakins stated: ‘I don’t like a long study of casts, even of the sculptors
of the best Greek period. At best, they are only imitations, and an imitation of
imitations cannot have so much life as an imitation of nature itself.’1 By the
late 19th
century, artists had been drawing plaster casts of ancient sculptures for
over four centuries,2 and the practice was standard at art academies in Europe
and America.3 Therefore, in spite of his aversion to the study of plaster casts
of ancient sculptures, Eakins was required to draw them as a student, both in
Philadelphia and in Paris.
Several of Eakins’ cast drawings survive, and demonstrate his reaction to
the antique, along with his increasing skill in rendering it. Two cast drawings
in graphite, executed on two pages ca. 7 by 10 inches from the same
sketchbook of wove paper,4 appear to be Eakins’ earliest cast drawings. Both
drawings are likely to have been executed shortly after Eakins received his first
admissions ticket on October 7, 1862, to study at the Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts in Philadelphia (hereafter referred to as PAFA), which granted
him permission to ‘DRAW FROM THE CASTS FROM THE ANTIQUE
AND ATTEND THE LECTURES ON ANATOMY.’5
The casts that are depicted in the two drawings can be linked to ones that
are listed in the 1868 Catalogue of the Paintings, Statuary in Marble, Casts in
Plaster, etc. the Property of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. The
first drawing (Fig. 1) shows a nude kneeling youth who raises both arms, with
his right arm held up higher than his left, as he looks fearfully up to his right.
This figure’s unusual pose matches that of the PAFA cast identified as the ‘Son
of Niobe.’ The 1868 catalogue provides this description of the cast, which is no
longer in the PAFA collection:
The original is in the Uffizi Gallery at Florence. It is one of the
figures of the group of Niobe and her children. He kneels and looks
up, seeking to avert the anger of Apollo. The group was found
beyond the gate of S. Giovanni at Rome.6
While this catalogue entry does seem to describe the figure in Eakins’
drawing, it is inaccurate in terms of the location that is given for the statuary
model for the cast. The marble statue that was the source for the cast is actually
in the Glyptothek in Munich. Nor is it certain that the statue shows one of the
doomed children of Niobe. He could instead be a fallen warrior, threatened by
1Brownell, September 1879, p. 742.
2Marchand, 2010, p. 61.
3Boime, 1986, pp. 27-32. Fahlman, 1991.
4On the sketchbook, see Foster et al., 1997, 295-296, no. 15.
5Rosenzweig, 1977, pp. 28-29.
6Catalogue, 1868, p. 21, no. 256, where it is listed under the heading ‘GALLERIES OF
CASTS FROM THE ANTIQUE ETC IN THE LOWER STORY.’ Compare Foster et al., 1997,
pp. 296-297, no. 15c, who suggests that ‘this kneeling youth probably was drawn from a
marble copy of Son of Niobe, owned—along with Daughter of Niobe—by PAFA by 1855.’
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a standing opponent.1 The statue in Munich in its current condition lacks the
arms and head that are shown in Eakins’ drawing. These were restored in the
early 19th
century by Austrian sculptor Johann Martin Fischer,2 and casts were
made of this restored version of the statue. Such casts are rare, since shortly
thereafter Fischer’s restorations were removed from the marble statue itself.3
However, since the cast in Eakins’ drawing exactly matches Fischer’s restored
version of the statue (Fig. 2), it is clear that this was the version once owned by
PAFA. A photograph from about 1890 that shows a PAFA drawing studio
includes a cast of the kneeling youth with Fischer’s restorations and proves this
assertion.4
Figure 1. Thomas Eakins, Cast drawing: Nude Man, Crouching, ca. 1862-63,
graphite on cream wove paper. 7-1/16 x 10-1/4 in. Courtesy of the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia
1Vierneisel-Schlörb, 1979, pp. 431-434, no. 39, figs. 210-215.
2See Poch-Kalous, 1949.
3Fiser; Vierneisel-Schlörb, 1979, p. 431.
4Foster et al., 1997, p. 24, fig. 28; Leibold, 2010, p. 186, fig. lower right. By the time that this
photograph was taken, the kneeling youth in the cast had lost his left arm.
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Figure 2. Casting from Johann Martin Fischer’s restoration of ‘Ilioneus’
(youngest son of Niobe), cast-iron. Chateau Park, Heldenberg, Austria.
Photograph courtesy of Jindřich Čeladín
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Kathleen Foster notes as early features in this drawing (Fig. 1) ‘the tight,
automatic hatching and the tentative contour.’1 The small scale of this and the
other drawings from the same sketchbook and the medium of graphite also
differ from the larger scale and the use of charcoal in other drawings from
Eakins’ student days at PAFA and in Paris. A further reason for an early dating
of the drawings from this sketchbook is the presence of a cloaked, grieving
female on the upper right of the second side of Figure 12 that resembles in pose
and dress the personification of Europe on the Gardel Monument. This tomb
was erected in the Mount Vernon Cemetery in Philadelphia in 1862 for the
wife of a friend of Eakins’ family.3
The second cast drawing from the same sketchbook (Fig. 3) can also be
linked to casts in PAFA’s 1868 catalogue that are not in their current
collection. The mask in the center of Fig. 3 may correlate to the catalogue’s
‘Mask of a Daughter of Niobe,’ as proposed by Kathleen Foster.4 Specifically,
in Eakins’ drawing, the raised position of the head, the profile of the face and
the arrangement of hair strands along the side of the face resemble the head
from one of the statues in the Uffizi that was once believed to depict one of
Niobe’s daughters but is now believed to represent a Muse.5 In this drawing,
the closely-spaced hatching both on and off the cast are similar to the hatching
in Fig. 1, and the contour of the chin and neck has been redrawn several times.
On the upper left in Fig. 3, Eakins sketched a second head, this time viewed
from the front. Surely this anguished, uplifted head is that of the Uffizi’s
Niobe, mother of the daughter whose face Eakins evidently thought he was
executing in the center of the drawing. PAFA’s 1868 catalogue includes a
‘Bust of Niobe (the original at Florence),’6 which would have been the source
of the sketched head in Eakins’ drawing. The Ashmolean Museum at Oxford
still possesses such a bust of Niobe (Fig. 4).7 Contrasting with the two dramatic
dramatic heads in Eakins’ drawing are the sketches of peaceful sleeping dogs
that are stretched out around the cast drawings.
A third cast drawing by Eakins that has survived is executed in charcoal on
a sheet of laid paper measuring 24 x 18-1/2 inches (Fig. 5). At the base of the
sheet, it bears the label ‘HERCULES.’ This drawing is inscribed with Eakins’
initials (TE) on the back, and it has the watermark in which the letters E B
1Foster et al., 1997, p. 296, cat. 15c.
2Foster et al., 1997, pp. 296-297, cat. 15c recto with illustration. For a larger view, see PAFA’s
online Albert M. Greenfield American Art Resource Online:http://www.pafa.org/museum/The-
Collection-Greenfield-American-Art-Resource/1065/ (do a “Quick Search” under the inventory
number, 1985.68.4.18r). 3For correspondence that dates the monument, see Wainwright, 1974, p. 67; see also Keels,
2003, p. 55. 4Catalogue, 1868, p. 26, no. 346; Foster et al., 1997, p. 297, cat. 15d.
5Mansuelli, 1958, pp. 130-131, no. 95, illustrated.
6Catalogue, 1868, p. 23, no. 284.
7Frederiksen & Smith, 2011, p. 194, no. C 254; see also p. 183, no. C 195.
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flank a winged caduceus inside a shield.1 Kathleen James distinguishes in the
drawing ‘six views of a man’s neck and jaw.’2 The most obvious are on the
upper left and lower right. Due to the beardless condition of the chin and the
fleshy lips, the Hercules depicted here cannot be the ‘Bust of Hercules (middle
life)’ in the 1868 PAFA catalogue,3 and may instead be the ‘Young Hercules’
that James states is included in ‘first complete catalogue of the school’s
collection, published about 1877-78,’ a cast that is no longer in PAFA’s
collection.4
Figure 3. Thomas Eakins, Cast drawing: Mask in Profile, ca. 1862-63,
graphite on cream wove paper. 7-1/16 x 10-1/8 in. Courtesy of the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
1For an image of this watermark, see Siegl, 1978, Appendix B, fig. 1c. According to Siegl, p.
61, the handmade paper in Eakins’ drawings with this watermark was French in origin, but was
imported to America for use by artists there. 2 Foster et al., 1997, p. 299, cat. 16.
3Catalogue, 1868, p. 25, no. 315.
4Foster et al., 1997, p. 299, cat. 16, note 1.
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Figure 4. Plaster cast of bust of Niobe from statue of Niobe and her youngest
daughter in Uffizi Gallery, Florence. Ashmolean Museum Broadway,
Worcestershire
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Figure 5. Thomas Eakins, Cast drawing: Hercules, charcoal on tan laid paper,
ca. 1862-63. 24 x 18-1/2 in. Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, Philadelphia
Although the Hercules drawing is on larger paper than Figs. 1 and 3 and is
executed in charcoal rather than graphite, it seems to be either contemporary
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with these drawings or not much later in date. Kathleen Foster notes in Fig. 5
the ‘short, tight and delicate hatching,’ and suggests a dating of 1862-63.1
Other characteristics in common with Figs. 1 and 3 reinforce Foster’s early
dating. For example, Eakins’ repeated effort at achieving an accurate facial
contour in the upper rendering of Hercules’ lower face and neck is a feature
also evident in the chin of the mask in Fig. 3. Also, the harsh contrasts of dark
and light shading in Hercules’ neck in the upper rendering are similar to the
unsubtle shading on the waist and stomach of the kneeling youth (Fig. 1).
A further reason for accepting a date of 1862-63 for Fig. 5 lies in Eakins’
stated dislike of ‘a long study of casts.’ We know from a class register at the
PAFA Archives that Eakins first enrolled in a life drawing class at PAFA on
February 23, 1863.2 It seems unlikely that he continued to draw from casts
when he was thereafter able to draw from nude models three evenings a week.
It is not known how long Eakins attended life drawing classes at PAFA. In her
dissertation of 1986, Elizabeth LaMotte Cates Milroy concludes that ‘Eakins
had to be in attendance at least until 1864.’3 Kathleen Foster suggests that he
made life drawings through ‘the conclusion of classes in the spring of 1866.’4
We do know that conditions at the life drawing class at PAFA were not
ideal. Eakins’ friend Earl Shinn describes the situation for PAFA students
drawing casts and for those enrolled in the life drawing classes:
It was not until 1855 that an attempt was made, though in a rather
perfunctory fashion, to put some classes in operation. Students were
permitted to draw from the cast in the daytime all the year round, and
on three evenings in the week, during six months in each year. A dark
and ill-ventilated cellar was fitted up as an amphitheatre, and here,
on three evenings in each week, from the first of October to the last of
April, the students who were regarded as being sufficiently advanced,
drew from the living model when one was procurable. No instruction
was provided, but the older students assisted their juniors to the best
of their ability.5
Shinn goes on to state that in 1865, painter and lithographer Christian
Schussele ‘was invited to take charge of the classes’ at PAFA, but that he was
in infirm health.6 Other, evidently more reliable sources, including the PAFA
Committee on Instruction Minutes, date the beginning of Schussele’s
instruction at PAFA to 1868, i.e. considerably after Eakins had sailed to France
on September 22, 1866.7 It seems likely that if Eakins was not provided with
1Foster et al., 1997, p. 24.
2Milroy, 1986, p. 70, note 31. Eakins’ PAFA admission ticket ‘to draw from the LIVE
MODEL’ is undated; see Rosenzweig, 1977, pp. 28-29. 3Milroy, 1986, p. 55.
4Foster et al., 1997, 25-26.
5Shinn, January 1884, p. 32.
6Ibid.
7Lippincott, 1976, pp. 166 and 266, note 8. For the date of Eakins’ departure for France, see
Homer, 2009, p. 19.
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instruction for PAFA life classes,1 none was offered for his study of casts of
ancient statues.
The situation was different for Eakins once he was admitted in late
October 1866 to the studio of Jean-Léon Gérôme at the École des Beaux-Arts
in Paris. We know exactly when he started his studies with Gérôme from a
letter that Eakins wrote to his father on Friday, October 26, 1866: ‘I’m in at last
and will commence to study Monday under Gérome.’2
Just two weeks after his admission into Gérôme’s studio, Eakins was
already benefiting from the exacting critiques that he and other students
received from the revered painter:
Gerome comes to each one, and unless there is absolute proof of the
scholar’s having been idle, he will look carefully and a long time at
the model and then at the drawing, and then he will point out every
fault. He treats all alike good and bad. What he wants to see is
progress. Nothing escapes his attention[.] Often he draws for us. The
oftener I see him the more I like him.3
In a letter to his father of December 23, Eakins spells out his schedule and
the advantages of study at the École des Beaux-Arts:
I do not think I have overrated the advantages of the Imperial School.
From 8 to 1 we have the living model. We have a palace to work in.
We have casts from all the good antique and many modern statues.
Twice a week our work is corrected by the best professors in the
world.4
Clearly, once Eakins was permitted to do life drawings, he did not
immediately cease doing cast drawings. On March 7, 1867, he wrote to his
father: ‘This week has been a holyday one. Monday & Tuesday they shut up
our studios and have given us no model for the rest of the week and so we draw
from the antique.’5 Five days later, on March 12, Eakins wrote to his father
about a compliment that Gérôme paid him:
The biggest compliment he ever paid me, was to say that he saw a
feeling for bigness in my modeling (Il y a un sentiment de grandeur là
dedans) and some times he says, “there now[,] you are on the right
track, now push.”6
1Susan Macdowell Eakins, Thomas Eakins’ widow, denied that her husband had ever studied
privately with Schussele; see Milroy, 1986, p. 58. 2Homer, 2009, p. 46.
3Ibid., p. 70: letter to Eakins’ father of November 11, 1866.
4Ibid., p. 77.
5Ibid., p. 92.
6Ibid., p. 97.
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Nine days afterwards, on March 21, Eakins was proud to report to his
father: ‘Gerome has at last told me I might get to painting & I commence
Monday.’1 As Katherine Foster notes, ‘Gerome kept him at charcoal and paper
for only five months before promoting him to brush and canvas.’2 Once Eakins
was allowed to start painting, he made no further reference to his own
execution of cast drawings. In fact, in an undated letter to his father of late
1867, Eakins expressed a vehement dislike for the École’s practice of setting
aside a week every month for all students, regardless of their level, to draw
from the antique:3
Gerome is very kind to me & has much patience because he knows I
am trying to learn & if I stay away he always asks after me & in spite
of advice I always will stay away the antique week and I often wish
now that I had never so much as seen a statue antique or modern till
after I had been painting for some time.4
A fourth extant cast drawing, now in the collection of the Columbus
Museum (Georgia), is likely to date to Eakins’ first five months of studies with
Gérôme, i.e. between late October 1866 and late March 1867—the only period
when he is known to have done cast drawings while at the École. The drawing,
executed in graphite and charcoal on laid paper measuring 23-5/8 by 18 inches,
is double-sided; this is unusual because Eakins only used the backs of sheets
one-fifth of the time.5 The sheet has a watermark that is otherwise unknown on
on the drawings by Eakins;6 it is a monogram, possibly of the letters “GE”. The
The drawing on one side shows a cast of the helmeted head of a Greek warrior
who is usually identified as Menelaus (Fig. 6). On the second side of the sheet
is a nude male model, shown seated on a block-like seat with his right arm
lowered and his left arm raised and supported by a sling that is suspended from
a rope (Fig. 7).
Kathleen Foster dates the cast drawing to Eakins’ PAFA days, specifically
‘after his entrance into life class in February 1863.’7 One of her reasons is that
a cast of the bust of Menelaus was in PAFA’s cast collection when Eakins was
a student there.8 Although PAFA’s cast does not survive today, an example is
in existence in Rome (Fig. 8).9 This cast, and undoubtedly the one once at
1 Ibid., p. 98.
2 Foster et al., 1997, 36.
3 On this practice, see Weinberg, 1984, p. 23.
4 Homer, 2009, p. 174.
5 Foster et al., 1997, p. 25.
6 Ibid., 1997, p. 236, note 8.
7 Ibid., 1997, p. 25.
8 Catalogue, 1868, p. 23, no. 275.
9 Morricone, 1981, p. 68, no. 11 above.
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PAFA, is of a famous marble bust in the Vatican, Rome, that was discovered in
Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli.1
Figure 6. Thomas Eakins, Head of a Warrior, ca. 1866-67, graphite and
charcoal on laid paper. 23-5/8 x 18 in. Collection of the Columbus Museum,
Georgia.
1Amelung, 1908, 506-508, no. 311. For a discussion of this and the other ancient Roman
replicas of the Menelaus head and the statuary group that it was once a part of with Menelaus
holding up the corpse of Patroclus, see Ridgway, 2001, 275-281.
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Figure 7. Thomas Eakins, Seated Nude (verso of fig. 6), ca. 1866-67, graphite
and charcoal on laid paper. Collection of the Columbus Museum, Georgia.
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Figure 8. Plaster cast of bust of Menelaus in the Vatican. Museo dell’Arte
Classica, Università di Roma.
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Foster does, however, note the ‘breadth and bravado’ of Fig. 6, and ‘the
progress made between Hercules [Fig. 5 in this article] and Menelaos.’1 These
striking improvements are very apparent in the more confident contours of the
warrior in Fig. 6, the more subtle and dramatic shading, the suggestion of bone
structure, particularly in the left cheek and brow, the skillful twist of the head,
and the overall convincing three-dimensionality of the head and its hair and
helmet that is successfully achieved in the drawing. Also notable is the fact that
unlike Eakins’ other cast drawings, the figure is not fragmented and included
with other images; rather, the composition encompasses the entire sheet. It
does not seem likely that Eakins would have made this type of progress
working on his own in the cast studios at PAFA. Instead, such improvements
could have been achieved under the critical eye of Gérôme, who was known
for his exacting critiques.
William Innes Homer also dates this drawing to Eakins’ Paris study. In
fact, his label for the illustration of the cast drawing (Fig. 6) in his The Paris
Letters of Thomas Eakins (published in 2009), dates it to ca. 1867, ‘an example
of Eakins’s drawing style at the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris.’2 Homer also
illustrates the cast drawing and the drawing on the back of it (Fig. 7) in an
earlier study, Thomas Eakins: His Life and Art (1992).3 Here, he does not seem
to realize that the two drawings are on the front and back of the same sheet of
paper, for he gives different dimensions for them. Also, in his discussion of
them, he implies that the cast drawing was executed earlier than the drawing of
the nude male model: ‘Starting with charcoal drawings of casts [Fig. 6 in this
article], then progressing to the nude [Fig. 7 in this article], Eakins made slow
progress in Gérôme’s class.’4
Since one of the reasons Kathleen Foster dated the double-sided drawing
to Eakins’ student days at PAFA was that PAFA possessed a cast of the
Menelaus bust, the question needs to be raised of whether a cast of the bust
might also have been available in Paris. There are a number of reasons to think
that this would have been the case. For one thing, the marble bust of Menelaus
was brought from Rome to the Louvre by Napoleon, and remained there until
its return to the Vatican in 1816.5 A cast of it is listed in a sales catalogue for
the cast studio in the Louvre (1883).6 A cast of the same bust is pictured in an
earlier photograph dated 1839-1840 of Hippolyte Bayard’s cast collection.7
Such casts were commonly purchased by French painters, sculptors and
photographers, and served as models and inspiration for their work.8 The
surviving cast collection of Gustave Moreau shows that many such casts were
sold by private establishments, while the large ones were purchased from the
1Foster et al., 1997, p. 25.
2Homer, 2009, fig. 19.
3Homer, 1992, pls. 26-27.
4Ibid., p. 31.
5Amelung, 1908, p. 507.
6Rionnet, 1996, p. 202, no. 651.
7Ibid., 89, fig. 63.
8Ibid., p. 89.
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Louvre.1 We know from Fanny Field Hering’s 1892 study on Gérôme that the
painter also had such a collection of casts, along with costumes and books.2
Unfortunately, we do not know exactly what casts he owned.
Figure 9. Thomas Eakins, Man in a Turban, ca. 1866-67, graphite over
charcoal on blue-green laid paper. 23-1/8 x 16-7/8 in. Achenbach Foundation
for Graphic Arts, The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
1Ibid., pp. 86-88, figs. 59-61.
2Hering, 1892, p. 251.
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The only drawing that is generally accepted as belonging to Eakins’ early
Paris years is a large graphite and charcoal study of a Man in a Turban (Fig.
9).1 This drawing is on laid paper with the French watermark of MICHALLET,
also found on other drawings by Eakins.2 Gordon Hendricks supports this
dating by citing ‘the relative naïveté of the technique [that] suggests the artist’s
first months in Paris.’3 The subject matter of ‘an exotically turbaned black or
Arab’ is further basis for accepting a date of 1866-1867 for Eakins’ drawing.4
Gérôme had recently shown his painting Prayer on the Rooftops in the Paris
Salon of 1865; this painting features turbaned Arabs in various positions of
prayer on the rooftops of Cairo.5 Gérôme is believed to have used Parisian
models wearing costumes from his collection for the Arabs in the painting.6 It
seems likely that he would have also encouraged students like Eakins to draw
local Arab models in his turbans. That Gérôme valued drawings as well as
paintings of Arabs in turbans is indicated by his gift of his own drawing of the
principal figure from his painting to William Thompson Walters in 1864.7
Stylistically, the turbaned head by Eakins has a number of characteristics
in common with Eakins’ drawing of the bust of Menelaus (Fig. 6), such as a
similar treatment of the tufts of hair, defined by energetic bands of shadow.
Furthermore, the bold strokes of charcoal across the undefined shoulders of the
figure (Fig. 9) are similar to the shading to the viewer’s right of Menelaus’
neck and left shoulder. The overall confidence of conception is another
common feature of the two drawings, and suggests they may be contemporary.
There are further reasons for dating the Columbus Museum’s double-sided
drawing to 1866-67. From Eakins’ correspondence we know that he was
studying from life and from the antique at the same time during his first few
months at the École. The fact that the nude and the cast are drawn on the same
sheet suggest that they were done very close in time, and their top orientations
being different might point to the fact that Eakins turned over a page in his
sketch book to draw on the back of the page. The drawing of the male nude
(Fig. 7) is surely the work of a student; although the lines are strong and the
shading subtle, there are problems with the foreshortening of the left knee and
elbow. Furthermore, the way in which the nude’s raised left arm requires a
sling to support it suggests that he had to pose for an extended time. Eakins’
testimony that the life drawing classes lasted five hours is consistent with this
supposition. Students of Gérôme and at the École des Beaux-Arts in general
worked on a single life drawing for an entire week.8 The emphasis in this
drawing on outlines is a final reason for assigning Figs. 6 and 7 to Eakins’
early Paris years. Gérôme is known to have stressed to his students that the
1Johnson & Goldyne, 1985, p. 200.
2Siegl, 1978, Appendix B, fig. 1a.
3Hendricks, 1974, p. 316, no. 5.
4Johnson & Goldyne, 1985, p. 200. See also Foster et al., 1997, p. 236, note 8; and Braddock,
2009, 61-65. 5Ackerman, 1986, pp. 67-71 and 216 no. 152.
6Kelly, 2005, p. 244.
7Ibid., pp. 244-245, no. 62 (Walters Art Museum).
8Weinberg, 1984, pp. 28-32; and Shinn, July 22, 1869, p. 68.
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major outlines defining the pose of the model should first be blocked in, and
the internal modeling achieved thereafter. For example, student Julian Alden
Weir wrote in 1874 that Gérôme ‘makes his pupils practice blocking in and
drawing in outlines with merely the principal shade, striving entirely for the
action of the figure.’1 In Eakins’ drawing (Fig. 7), there is an emphasis on
outlines throughout, and the feet of the male remain unmodeled, as if the artist
was unable to complete the drawing; nor did Eakins fill in the shoulders of
Menelaus in the drawing on the other side of the sheet (Fig. 6).
Figure 10. Thomas Eakins, Detail of Dr. Gross from Portrait of Dr. Samuel D.
Gross (The Gross Clinic) (shown in thumbnail), 1875, oil on canvas. 96 x 78-
1/2 in. Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia
and the Philadelphia Museum of Art
1Weinberg, 1984, p. 25.
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If the proposed dating for the Columbus Museum’s drawing is correct,
then Eakins must have treasured it enough to bring it back to Philadelphia from
Paris. 1
As it is a fully-realized, double-sided work showing both life and cast
drawing, it would have been an excellent example of his work there.2 In
particular, the drawing of the Menelaus bust seems to have some of the
‘bigness’ or ‘grandeur’ that Gérôme saw in Eakins’ work.
Eakins continued his distaste of drawing from the antique in his years of
teaching at PAFA, reducing the time that his students spent on their drawing of
casts before they embarked on their study of painting. He stated: ‘If I had
known what I know now, I would have been a painter in half the time it took
me.’3 Despite this regret, one wonders if Eakins’ early studies of casts might
have influenced his mature work. For example, in his first monumental
painting, his portrait of 1875 of the esteemed Dr. Samuel D. Gross, Eakins may
have used his drawing of the Menelaus bust as inspiration for the surgeon’s
helmet-like hair and the twist of his head away from his patient (Fig. 10). The
portrait’s heroic qualities have been widely noted and appreciated,4 and
Eakins’ dramatic cast drawing might have helped the artist achieve the noble
effect of the famous surgeon’s head.
1Maria Jo Chamberlin-Hellman finds this improbable. She concluded: ‘I do not consider it
likely that Eakins would have bothered to bring such an elementary exercise home with him
from the École des Beaux-Arts, where he actively avoided sessions devoted to the antique.’
Chamberlin-Hellman, 1981, p. 55, note 157. 2Perhaps he brought it back to show his parents. The fact that it survived past his student days
is a testament to the support and encouragement that Eakins received from his parents, who
must have treasured the extant childhood sketches, high school exercises, cast and life class
drawings, and letters from Paris as proof of his early talent. See Foster et al., 1997, p. 14. 3Bregler, March 1931, p. 383.
4See, for example, Johns, 1983, p. 52.
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